beautypg.com

Elecraft K3 Owner's Manual User Manual

Page 65

background image

65

impedance. Allow heat sink to cool. Reduce power if necessary. Make sure the CONFIG:PA TEMP menu
entry is calibrated (allow heat sink to cool to room temperature, then compare menu reading to actual).

ALC OFF

is displayed on VFO A during transmit

:

Set CONFIG:TX ALC to

ON

. ALC should only be

turned off during band-pass filter alignment (do not adjust filters without consulting Elecraft support).

• Can’t transmit in CW mode: (1) Make sure the key or keyer paddle is plugged into the correct jack.

(2) You must have VOX selected (

VOX

icon on) in order to use hit-the-key CW. (3) You may be in

S P L IT

mode, with VFO B set for a voice or data mode. Tap

A /B

or use

B S E T

to check VFO B’s mode.

• Can’t key external amplifier in CW mode: Some amplifiers require a longer delay from keyline activation

to first RF. See CONFIG:TX DLY. (Caution: Long TX DLY settings may affect keyer timing.)

• Key clicks in QSK CW mode with an external amplifier:. This may be due to a slow amplifier relay (use

CONFIG:TX DLY) or incorrect application of external ALC (see CONFIG:EXT ALC and pg. 27).

• Can’t use the mic in voice modes: You may be in

S P L IT

mode, with VFO B set for CW or data mode

rather than a voice mode. Tap

A /B

or use

B S E T

to check VFO B’s mode.

• No power output: You may have routed RF through the KXV3’s XVTR IN/OUT jacks, either by switching

to a transverter band, or by setting CONFIG:KXV3 to

TES T

. Also try redoing TX GAIN cal (pg. 49).

• Relay heard switching during keying: If this happens only above a certain power level, transmit signal

leakage may be activating the carrier-operated-relay circuitry on either the KXV3 module (RF I/O) or the
KRX3 (sub receiver). You must improve isolation between transmit and receive antennas or decrease output
power. If a relay switches during keying even at very low power levels, it could be due to: (1) SPLIT
operation with different bands and/or modes, or the receive VFO tuned outside any ham band; or (2) VFO A
is tuned such that a relay switches during T/R due to incorrect VCO calibration (re-run VCO CAL).

Receive

HI RFI

warning: A high-power transmitter may be coupling into the K3’s antenna in receive mode. The

warning occurs when the ANT1 or 2 input signal exceeds about 1 to 2 W. Also see CONFIG:RFI DET.

HI SIG

warning: An extremely strong, sustained signal (e.g., a broadcast station’s carrier) may be causing

excessive post-mixer amplifier current when operating on the present band. The K3 will automatically turn
the preamp OFF, and in extreme cases will also turn the attenuator ON.

HI CUR

or

SP KRS=1

warning:

HI CUR

may indicate a shorted left speaker channel; the K3 will

reduce AF gain.

SPK RS=1

may indicate that CONFIG:SPKRS is set to

2

, but a mono external speaker

plug is in use, shorting the right speaker channel to ground. The K3 automatically sets SPKRS to

1

.

• No received signal: Check (1) receiver being squelched (if RF/SQL controls are assigned to squelch via

CONFIG:SQ MAIN or SQ SUB, rotate squelch controls fully counter-clockwise); (2) RF GAIN too low
(set RF gain controls fully clockwise); (3) bandwidth too narrow (set WIDTH or tap

X F IL

, and also

verify filter configuration settings); (4) switching to an open receive antenna on the KXV3 (RX ANT IN);
(5) switching the KAT3 to an open antenna jack; (6) CONFIG:REF CAL parameter not adjusted properly;
(7) CONFIG:KXV3 may be set to

TES T

, which routes all RF through the XVTR IN/OUT jacks.

• Received signal level too low: (1) Try setting CONFIG:AF GAIN to

HI

; (2) check headphone and speaker

plugs and cables; (3) make sure that CONFIG:RX EQ settings are either flat or have not been set for a large
amount of cut; (4) recheck filter configuration, including CONFIG:FLx BW, FLx GN, and FLx FRQ; (5)
verify that CONFIG:REF CAL is properly adjusted; (6) make sure RF GAIN is set to maximum.

• Spurious signals (“birdies”): All high-dynamic range receivers exhibit some birdies. Most will be

inaudible with an antenna connected. If you find a birdie that’s audible above normal band noise, see the
CONFIG:SIG RMV menu entry. Autonotch may be useful for removing birdies in voice modes.

• VFO tuning noise: If you hear a weak “ticking” noise on some bands while tuning the VFO, even with an

antenna connected, refer to CONFIG:VCO MD (VFO Tuning Noise Reduction).